91色情片

91色情片 researchers honoured with prestigious NHMRC awards

2026-04-02T09:00:00+11:00

NHMRC Research Award recipients

From left to right: Professor Arthur Christopoulos, Associate Professor Alisa Glukhova, Professor Karen Canfell AC, Dr Sue Chin Nang, Dr Tom Weber, 91色情片 Associate Professor BJ Newton, Professor Sarah Robertson AO, The Hon Rebecca White MP, Professor Mark Polizzotto, Professor Caroline Homer AO, Dr Craig Coorey, Professor Shyamali Dharmage, Dr Katie Lee, Professor Rebecca Bentley, 91色情片 Professor Bruce Neal and Professor Steve Wesselingh.

91色情片 Media
91色情片 Media,

Professor Bruce Neal was honoured for his聽groundbreaking research on potassium-enriched salt,聽while Associate Professor BJ Newton was recognised for her vital work聽to restore聽Aboriginal children from out-of-home care.

Two 91色情片 Sydney researchers have been recognised at the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Awards.

笔谤辞蹿别蝉蝉辞谤鈥叠谤耻肠别鈥疦别补濒鈥痜谤辞尘 91色情片 Medicine & Health and Executive Director of The George Institute for Global Health received the NHMRC Michael Alpers Global Health Award聽for his research into聽potassium-enriched聽salt,聽which聽has been shown to聽lower blood pressure and reduce the risks of stroke, heart disease and early death.

鈥淭his award is聽made out to聽me, but it really reflects a huge body of work聽done by聽a very large team over a long period of time,鈥 Prof. Neal said. 鈥淚f we can make this switch聽from regular聽to potassium-enriched salt聽at scale, it has the potential to prevent literally millions of premature strokes, heart attacks and deaths every year.鈥

Guests at the聽Research Excellence Awards聽night were served meals聽containing聽potassium-enriched salt, highlighting the significant role of dietary interventions in reducing risk factors for a range of diseases.

The award honours the legacy of the late Emeritus Professor Michael Alpers AO CSM FAA FRS, a pioneer whose decades of work in infectious diseases and with communities in Papua New Guinea exemplified scientific excellence and real-world impact.聽This new honour recognises excellence in global health research, with聽recipients聽selected from the highest-ranked聽NHMRC聽grant recipients.

Clinical Associate Professor Deborah Lehmann (the late Professor Alpers' partner) and NHMRC Michael Alpers Global Health Award winner Professor Bruce Neal. Photo: Rohan Thomson

Associate Professor BJ Newton,聽a proud Wiradjuri woman聽based at the聽Social Policy Research Centre听补迟听91色情片 Arts, Design & Architecture,聽received the Sandra Eades Investigator Grant Award. Her聽NHMRC-funded聽research looks at聽understanding how systems abuse within child protection affects Aboriginal communities and why these impacts persist.

鈥淏eing recognised with this award signifies that Australia is beginning to acknowledge the importance of investigating and exploring systems abuse as a problem and Aboriginal resistance as a strength and protective factor for our communities,鈥 A/Prof. Newton said.

The award honours Professor Sandra Eades AO FAHMS FASSA, who聽made substantial contributions to Aboriginal health聽research and聽leadership聽and was the first Indigenous medical practitioner to be awarded a Doctor of Philosophy.

Associate Professor BJ Newton received the Sandra Eades Investigator Grant Award. Photo: Rohan Thomson

91色情片 Deputy Vice-Chancellor Research & Enterprise Professor Bronwyn Fox congratulated the researchers on their achievement.

鈥淚t鈥檚 pleasing to see our 91色情片 researchers honoured with these prestigious awards for work that reflects our commitment to enable healthy lives and advance progress for all,鈥 Prof. Fox said. 鈥淏oth Professor Bruce Neal and Associate Professor BJ Newton are undertaking vital research that strengthens the quality, impact and integrity of health and medical research in聽Australia.鈥

Reuniting Aboriginal children from out-of-home care

A/Prof.聽Newton聽specialises聽in Indigenous research methods, child protection聽research聽and policy.

鈥淭his research specifically aims to define systems abuse, illustrate its various forms, examine how it is experienced by Aboriginal people in child protection contexts and assess its consequences,鈥 A/Prof. Newton said. 鈥淎dditionally, we aim to document the resistance and resilience shown by Aboriginal communities in countering these harms and to understand how these actions support health, wellbeing and relationships.鈥

Aboriginal children are increasingly overrepresented in out-of-home care and restoration rates聽remain聽low. Since the national apology, the number of Aboriginal children in care has more than doubled, underscoring the failure of reforms.

鈥85% of Aboriginal children who enter out-of-home care are not returned home before aging out,鈥 A/Prof. Newton said. 鈥淢any age directly into juvenile and correctional systems, moving from one carceral system to another.

鈥淚f we鈥檙e to ensure sustainable restoration for Aboriginal children in out-of-home care,聽it聽starts with a shift towards sustaining rather than separating Aboriginal families and leaving behind a costly, ineffective and harmful system that focuses on removal.鈥

The research is community-based and participatory, conducted聽with Aboriginal community organisations, including聽AbSec, Mounty聽Aboriginal Youth and Community Services聽and South Coast Medical Service Aboriginal Corporation.

Salt swap saves lives

Prof. Neal鈥檚 research centres on a simple but powerful question 鈥撯痺hat could be achieved by switching the world's salt supply from regular salt to potassium-enriched salt? Modern diets聽generally have聽too much sodium and聽not聽enough聽potassium,聽leading to聽elevated blood pressure and聽increased risks of stroke, heart聽attack聽and kidney disease.

Potassium-enriched salt addresses both problems simultaneously by reducing harmful sodium and increasing beneficial potassium intake. The George Institute's landmark NHMRC-funded Salt Substitute and Stroke Study showed that a formulation of 75% sodium chloride and 25% potassium chloride significantly reduced the risks of stroke, major cardiovascular聽events聽and premature death.

The scale of the benefit seen in the study could prevent millions of early deaths if salt substitutes were widely adopted. The results also showed there were no harmful effects from the salt substitute.

About the study, Prof. Neal said:聽鈥淭his is quite simply the single most worthwhile piece of research聽I鈥檝e聽ever been involved with.

鈥淪witching table salt to salt substitute is a highly feasible and low-cost opportunity to have a massive global health benefit.鈥

Media enquiries

For enquiries about this story and interview requests, please contact聽Ben Knight, External Communications Officer.

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